A comparison of two recent polls about American Jews' attitudes toward the Iran deal, one for J-Street and the other for The Israel Project, seems to indicate that the more people are aware of the specifics of the deal, the more they are opposed to it.

On Twitter, John Kerry's senior advisor Marie Harf shared Washington Post headline that exaggerated and even fabricated Israeli praise for the Iran deal. Both the administration and the newspaper owe readers a correction.

CAMERA prompts an AP correction of the erroneous claim that the Israeli Rabbinate controls circumcisions. While the Orthodox body controls marriages, divorces and burials, it plays no role in circumcisions (except for those done for conversion).

The best drama in 2015's Washington, D.C. Capital Fringe Festival's theater productions was It's What We Do, billed as A Play about the Occupation. Except the play's not a drama, it's anti-Israel agit-prop.

The title and framing of an opinion piece in The Forward might convince some that in Israel's security establishment there is a consensus about the Iran agreement being a "good" deal. A closer look is in order.

Did the Palestinian Return Center twice receive consultative status at the U.N? After yesterday's article about the new development, AP corrects last month's report which had wrongly claimed that the group then achieved that status.

In a Times of Israel blog, CAMERA exposed the threat to Jewish-Christian relations that results from Empowered 21's unreflective alliance with Palestinian Christians who propagate a narrative rooted in demonization of Israel.

Who are the reckless Haaretz translators who in one week inflated the number of Palestinian casualties and underreported Israeli casualties? Which Israeli terror victim will be the next casualty of Haaretz translations?

Saudi bombardment of Yemen has inflicted higher civilian casualties than Israeli operations in Gaza, but gets less coverage, according to a BBC correspondent, because it is less safe and less accessible for reporters.

An assertion in a New York Times editorial yesterday that Benjamin Netanyahu "opposed negotiations with Iran from the outset" is belied by a series of news stories appearing over 20 months in The Times.

Al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day in Iran continues to be celebrated annually with marches and cries of Death to America! and Death to Israel! This year's event took place during the conclusion of U.S.-led talks with Iran over its nuclear program. Not all major media noticed.

With captions that ignore Khader Adnan's top position in Islamic Jihad, AFP functions more like a public relations firm instead of a news agency. The homecoming photos appeal to viewers' emotions, the captions mislead.

Haaretz's English edition corrects the latest "Lost in Translation." A Hebrew Op-Ed had accurately referred to "dozens" of Palestinians killed Aug. 1 in Rafah. Translators inflated that figure to "more than 150."

CAMERA prompts clarification of a Reuters "Gaza's blockade" graphic which had noted only Israeli restrictions and ignored the much harsher Egyptian blockade, misrepresenting Rafah as under Israeli control.

Haaretz's free-wheeling translators are at it again. This time, while an Op-Ed in the Hebrew edition correctly notes "scores" of Palestinians killed Aug. 1 in Rafah, the English edition writes "of more than 150."

One year after Gaza fighting, media outlets highlight stagnant civilian rebuilding and ignore Hamas' alleged success in rearming. Also, Reuters agrees there's a problem with a graphic which falsely depicts Egypt's closure of Rafah as part of Israel's blockade.

Unreflective support for, and involvement with, Palestinian Christian leaders who promote a fallacious anti-Israel narrative compromises the credibility of this global movement and the Christian faith it seeks to propagate.

CAMERA's 2011 study, Indicting Israel: New York Times Coverage of the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict, devoted an entire chapter to "Violence Double Standards" demonstrating how Palestinan terrorism and violence against Israelis is reported through a lens of Palestinian victimhood. Recent coverage of violence in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict demonstrates the same pattern of distortions.

Rev. John Dorhauer, the newly-elected president and general minister of the United Christ, had a chance to express his misgivings about a BDS resolution passed by his church's General Synod. He did not take it.

Journalists should understand that the production of a satire video by the Israeli government in no way vindicates their own reporting. They shouldnt insult readers intelligence by suggesting otherwise. And they should take a deep breath before reacting, because they might just prove the very point the video tried to make.

CAMERA prompts correction of an AFP article which stated as fact that 17 journalists were killed in fighting last summer in Gaza. Among the 17 are Hamas and Islamic Jihad combatants and media operatives.

With too few exceptions, the New York Times Jerusalem bureau chief follows a pattern of tendentious, shoddy reporting focused on faulting Israel, its leaders, society and policies for the ills of the region.

+ 972 Magazine editors correct a post which wrongly identified an excerpt from a Los Angeles Times article as CAMERA's conclusion that Israel is allegedly cutting Palestinians out of the tourism market.

UCLA Prof. Saree Makdisi, an anti-Israel polemicist, popped up in The Los Angeles Times again. This time he tried to shield BDS intolerance with academic freedom. Thanks to The Los Angeles Jewish Journal, CAMERA exposed his fraud.

CAMERA prompts correction of a Jerusalem Post article which erroneously stated that U.N. Resolution 242 "calls for Israeli withdrawal to pre-1967 lines." The key resolution does not specify from which and how much territory Israel should withdraw.

The New York Times and The Telegraph point to Netanyahu's new government guidelines which don't mention a Palestinian state as evidence of his intransigence. But for decades, successive governments, including those who negotiated, didn't mention a Palestinian state in their guidelines.

The Palestinian Football Association, headed by a convicted terrorist, wants international soccer to isolate and embarrass Israel. Superficial Washington Post coverage should embarrass the newspaper.